Milan Rakić

Milan Rakić
photo of Jovan Dučić (left) and Milan Rakić (right)

Milan Rakić (18 September 1876 - 30 June 1938[1]) (Милан Ракић) was a Serbian poet. He focused on dodecasyllable and hendecasyllable verse, which allowed him to achieve beautiful rhythm and rhyme in his poems. He was quite a perfectionist and therefore only published two collections of poems (1903, 1912). He wrote largely about death and non-existence, keeping the tone sceptical and ironic. Two of his most well-known poems are An Honest Song (Iskrena pesma), A Desperate Song (Očajna pesma), Jefimija, Simonida and At Gazi-Mestan (Na Gazi-Mestanu). He was a member of the Serbian Royal Academy (1934).

Contents

Biography

The poet was born in 1876 in Belgrade. He finished elementary school (grade school) and high school (gymnasium) in Belgrade. In Paris, France he finished law school. It was in Paris that he, like Dučić, came under the influence of French poets. They both had learned to admire French culture and had dreamed of a better world after the war. After returning to Belgrade from Paris he became a diplomat (like Jovan Dučić) for the Serbian (and later Yugoslav government) and remained in that job until nearly his death, representing the country abroad. He died prematurely in 1938 in Zagreb, Yugoslavia (now Croatia) right after surgery.

His father Mita Rakić, educated abroad, was Serbia's Minister of Finance (1888). Writer Milan Đ. Milićević was his maternal grandfather.

Publications

  • Collection of Poems, 1903
  • Collection of Poems, 1912

Reception

His poetry is mainly centred on love and philosophical themes. Like Dučić, he shows signs of a decadent spirit acquired in Paris, but he is more profound in his sensitivity and perception of reality. He is also more pessimistic in outlook, resigned to the basically tragic nature of existence as expressed in man's inability to truly enjoy his experiences and to halt the inexorable passage of time. Rakić is also more pensive and subdued than Dučić, finding it difficult to rejoice amidst decay, flight of time, and approaching death. Even his patriotic poems reveal this pessimistic tone, although he also expresses hope for the revival of Serbian spiritual glory.

Although he wrote very few poems (altogether 64), his poems are considered some of the highest-quality Serbian poetic works. His works follow the school founded by Vojislav Ilić. After Aleksa Šantić and Jovan Dučić, Milan Rakić is generally considered the third greatest Serbian poet of the twentieth century. He is well respected for writing thoughtful patriotic and religious poetry at a time during which romanticism was the style of lyric choice. He is particularly well-known as the poet who perfected the hendecasyllable verse using rich vocabulary and calm imagery. The language of his poems is crystal clear, without obfuscation or unnecessary drama. With Aleksa Šantić, Milan Rakić had brought life back to Serbian patriotic poetry.

Rakić was a religious poet. The earth he loves and celebrates has meaning for him as reflection and expression of God. The human relationships he cherishes hold the same sanction. In the work of no other notable Serbian poet of the first half of the 20th century is a religious element so positive and so pervasive.

One can truly say that Rakić, indeed, belongs to the best Serbian poets of the twentieth century.

References

Jovan Skerlić, Istorija Nove Srpske Književnosti (Belgrade, 1914 and 1921), pages 458-460.

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Milan Rakić — Milan Rakic, en serbe cyrillique Милан Ракић (né le 18 septembre 1876 à Belgrade mort le 30 juin 1938 à Zagreb), était un poète serbe. Il a écrit des poèmes en dodécasyllabes et en hendécasyllabes, qui parlent de la mort et de …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Milan Rakič — Personal information Full name Milan Rakič Date of birth 9 February 1981 (1981 …   Wikipedia

  • Rakić — is a Serbian surname, and may refer to:* Đorđe Rakić (born 1985), Serbian football player * Milan Rakić (1876 1938), Serbian poet * Milos Rakić (born 1987), Serbian football midfielder * Paško Rakić (21st century), Serbian neuroscientist …   Wikipedia

  • Milan Orlic — (b. 1962 in Pančevo, Serbia) is a poet, prose writer and essayist. Orlic finished his Masters thesis at the Department of Philosophy in Belgrade. He is the winner of the following literary prizes: “Isidora Sekulić,” “Milan Rakić,” “Branko… …   Wikipedia

  • Milan Biševac — Personal information Full name Milan Biševac …   Wikipedia

  • Milan Stepanov — Personal information Date of birth April 2, 1983 (1983 04 02) (age 28) Place of birth …   Wikipedia

  • Milan Purović — Personal information Date of birth 7 May 1985 (1985 05 07) (age 26) Place of birth …   Wikipedia

  • Milan Smiljanić — Milan Smiljanić …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Rakić —   [ raːkitɕ], Milan, serbischer Lyriker, * Belgrad 18. 9. 1876, ✝ Zagreb 30. 6. 1938; seit 1904 im diplomatischen Dienst (u. a. Kopenhagen, Oslo, Rom); bedeutender Vertreter der serbischen Moderne. Seine an den französischen Parnassiens und… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Milan Smiljanić — Lola Smiljanić Smiljanić warming up with Espanyol Personal information Full name …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”